Definitely it makes a difference which greens you try, but much as I enjoy a cup of sencha in the morning, I'm really just as happy with a cup of oolong or long jing. I'd be sure you've tried some good ones before you give up on them, but don't feel obliged to prefer them.

Try to describe what you didn't like in japanese teas and what you like in others. This might help more, japanese green tea does have quite big variety in flavors actually. And depends on which tea and grade brewing parameters also can vary a lot.

Just an example, for inexpensive daily sencha i usually go for 0.5-0.7g/30ml and with high grade sencha can easy go as high as 1.5-2g/30ml

But honestly it took me a while to get Japanese Greens too. They are certainly odd, in the sense that they can seem a lot more like a strong seaweed soup, with some grain character thrown in. While they can have a sweetness, its not the fruity sweetness you find in other teas, even other countries green teas. Their sweetness is more like the sweetness you can find in cabbage and other green vegetables ( again some people may think I am crazy for calling those things sweet).

I am not sure if its the more I have grown to like Sencha, the more I like vegetables, or the other way around. Either way Sencha can seem very much like eating ones vegetables, compared to other teas.

I'm discovering that I don't care for the senchas with a pronounced vegetable aroma and taste (and I LOVE eating all manner of vegetables and even drink some veggie juice). I also can't handle the smell of houjicha. It makes me want to gag. The taste is alright, but I just can't get past that smell!

I do much better with your middle of the road sencha. I'm currently enjoying Den's Organic Sencha, which is very mild and well-balanced. I brew it 2 level teaspoons per 8 oz or so with the water at about 170F.

If I'm honest, I really am just more of a Chinese green sort of girl. Give me something with a delicate floral sweetness and a hint of astringency and I'm in heaven!

I hated JPN greens when I started. Just tasted of seaweedy foulness whatever grade I bought. But I kept going. And spent a period of time just drinking them. My taste adapted and I learnt to love them.

I had the same with oolongs actually at one point.

Anyway they are the majority of what I drink now. I think its more that my perception of what they should taste like and what is desirable in tea flavour has expanded/changed.

I drank nothing but Chinese greens for 5 years prior so that made my taste quite narrow.

I brew most of my sencha at 60c-63c which is quite a bit lower then most like but I like it.

I took a while to warm up to Japanese greens too, and while I don't really dislike any senchas, I definitely prefer the lighter asamushi styles to the fukamushi, because I love the lighter/vegetal/floral flavors and not as much the heavier/ocean/umami flavors of the fuka. I'm still not sure about gyokuro--I'm hoping for an OTTI (!) to sample several different really fancy gyos to see if that changes how I feel about them.

I'm also rather picky with Chinese greens, looking for the same flavor profiles--floral/sweeter/lighter/vegetal.

And we haven't even discussed the specialty Japanese greens, like some really delicious Kamairichas from Yuuki-cha that I had in another forum. They were closer to a Chinese green in flavor profile, but still....different, and lovely.

You don't have to be a deep-steamed & gyo fan to enjoy Japanese greens.

And now, I really want some sencha, but I have none. I thought that there was one last pouch at the bottom of the tea drawer, but it is.....gone. Aiyee!